Edward/James/Leigh Hutchinson v. Nancy Neuman & James Day

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 20, 2002
DocketW2001-02886-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Edward/James/Leigh Hutchinson v. Nancy Neuman & James Day (Edward/James/Leigh Hutchinson v. Nancy Neuman & James Day) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edward/James/Leigh Hutchinson v. Nancy Neuman & James Day, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON September 20, 2002 Session

EDWARD HUTCHINSON, JAMES HUTCHINSON, AND LEIGH HUTCHINSON V. NANCY H. NEUMAN AND JAMES L. DAY, JR.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Fayette County No. 12284 Dewey C. Whitenton, Chancellor

No. W2001-02886-COA-R3-CV - Filed May 27, 2003

This is a will construction case. The husband devised a life estate in land to his wife, and at her death, to his devisees. The husband devised other land in fee simple to his wife, and gave her the rest and residue of his estate. The husband died in 1954 and the wife died in 1998. The remaindermen under the husband’s will argued that certain real property was included in the wife’s life estate and, thus, at her death, devolved to them. The beneficiaries of the wife’s will argued that the real property in question was not included in the life estate or mentioned in the husband’s will, and thus the land went to the wife in fee simple by operation of the residue clause in the husband’s will and should now devolve to them. The trial court found that the husband intended to include the land in question in the life estate to the wife. Therefore, the land devolved to the husband’s devisees. The beneficiaries of the wife’s estate appeal. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed

HOLLY KIRBY LILLARD, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., and ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., joined.

J. Payson Matthews, Somerville, Tennessee, and Arthur E. Neuman, Washington, DC, for appellants, Nancy H. Neuman and James L. Day, Jr.

Thomas M. Minor, Somerville, Tennessee, for appellees Edward Hutchinson, James Hutchinson, and Leigh Hutchinson.

OPINION

In 1926, Bailey K. Morrison (“Decedent”) purchased from J. T. Green approximately 138 acres of land (“J. T. Green tract”), situated in Fayette County, Tennessee. In 1945, the Decedent entered into a land-exchange agreement with George Green, and through this came to own approximately 25 acres of land (“George Green tract”). The J. T. Green tract was adjacent to and immediately south of the George Green tract. The tracts were part of a larger parcel of land of over 2,323 acres owned by the Decedent. In 1952, the Decedent executed a will that devised a life estate to his wife, Allien Day Morrison Nunn (“Wife”), in a number of parcels of the total 2,323 acres of land. Under the Decedent’s will, at Wife’s death, the remainder would devolve to the Decedent’s sister and his nieces. One parcel included in the Wife’s life estate was “the Buck Green Farm composed of approximately 125 acres.” The Decedent’s will contained other devises and bequests to Wife and to others. The residue of the Decedent’s estate was devised and bequeathed to Wife. The Decedent died in 1954. Wife died over forty years later, in 1998.

Thus, at the time of Wife’s death in 1998, the Decedent’s devisees, Edward Hutchinson, James Hutchinson and Leigh Hutchinson (“Plaintiffs”), became the owners in fee simple of the real property in which Wife was granted a life estate. All real property devised by the Decedent to Wife in fee simple, or that passed to Wife through the residual clause in the Decedent’s will, were owned outright by Wife at her death. This real property would pass pursuant to Wife’s will to the beneficiaries under her will, Nancy H. Neuman and James L. Day, Jr. (“Defendants”).

In 1999, the Plaintiff-Appellees filed a lawsuit against the Defendant-Appellants alleging, inter alia, that the parties were unable to specifically designate ownership of every parcel of land within the 2,323 acre tract owned by the Decedent at the time of his death. The lawsuit originally sought injunctive relief to require the Defendants to lease their land.1 Pursuant to the complaint, a survey of the overall tract was conducted. The survey combined the J. T. Green tract and the George Green tract and called it the “Buck Green Farm.” The Defendants then supplemented their answer to the complaint, asserting that the surveyors erred in combining the two tracts. They argued that the 25 acre George Green tract was not part of the life estate in the “Buck Green Farm” granted to Wife. The Defendants asked the trial court to determine ownership of the 25 acre George Green tract.

A hearing was held on August 4, 2000. The primary issue to be tried was construction of the clause in the Decedent’s will devising a life estate to Wife in the “Buck Green farm composed of 125 acres.” It was undisputed that there was not a single parcel of land of 125 acres, and it was unclear who “Buck Green” was.

The Plaintiffs called as a witness Keith Morris (“Morris”), a licensed real estate broker who had worked for the Plaintiffs as an agent and a manager of their property. Morris was familiar with the Plaintiffs’ property. He noted that the Decedent, in his will, estimated the acreage of a number of parcels of land. Morris compared the Decedent’s estimated acreage of seven of the parcels to the

1 The original complaint averred that the Defendants were unwilling to consent to leasing their portion of the 2,323 acres for farming purposes. Because rightful ownership of each parcel had not be en de termined, P laintiffs asserted that Defendants’ refusal to lease their land prevented Plaintiffs from leasing their land. Therefore, Plaintiffs sought an injunction ordering D efendants to lease all of their land suitable for farming. The Defendants denied that they were not willing to lea se the land for farming.

-2- actual acreage of each parcel, and found that the Decedent’s estimates were approximately 15% to 18% more or less than the actual acreage.2 Morris noted that at least three of the parcels in which Wife was devised a life estate were composed of more than one tract and one deed, and observed that when the 138 acre J. T. Green tract was combined with the George Green tract, the total acreage was 161.43. Morris had researched deeds and did not find a “Buck Green” on any deed. Morris did not know a J. T. Green, a George Green, or a Buck Green. At the hearing, the Plaintiffs also introduced into evidence a 1945 survey color-coded to show the J. T. Green and the George Green tracts combined.

The Defendants called Herbert Walls (“Walls”) to testify. At the time of the hearing, Walls was seventy-one years old, and had been a neighbor of the Decedent and his Wife for a number of years. Walls said that he knew George Green, had heard of a Buck Green but did not know him, and had never known a J. T. Green. Walls testified that the J. T. Green property was also known as the Buck Green place. He indicated that, after the Decedent acquired the George Green tract in 1945, he began farming the J. T. Green tract and the George Green tract together as if they were one tract.

The Defendants also called William E. Dowdy (“Dowdy”), aged sixty-seven, who worked for Wife on the farm from 1957 until 1970. Dowdy knew George Green and had never referred to him as Buck Green, although he had heard the name Buck Green. Dowdy had no knowledge of anyone named J. T. Green. Contrary to Walls’s testimony, Dowdy said that the George Green tract was not being farmed at the time Dowdy began working for the Wife in the late 1950s, but rather that it was pasture.

The trial court ruled orally that the preponderance of the evidence indicated that it was the Decedent’s intent that Wife be devised a life estate in the 25 acre George Green tract as part of the Buck Green Farm, and that the Decedent did not intend for the 25 acre George Green tract to pass to Wife as part of the residuary estate. Hence, the trial court held that the 25 acre George Green tract, as well as the 138 acre J. T. Green tract, should pass to the Plaintiffs, the remaindermen under the Decedent’s will.

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Edward/James/Leigh Hutchinson v. Nancy Neuman & James Day, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwardjamesleigh-hutchinson-v-nancy-neuman-james-d-tennctapp-2002.